Good health makes you a winner

The author tries to equate good health with wealth and the connection to addictions. I personally do not agree, but his arguments are very persuasive.

"The foundation of success in life is good health: that is the bedrock of fortune; it is also the basis of happiness. A person cannot accumulate a fortune very well when he is sick. He has no ambition; no motivation; no energy..."

"...Of course, there are those who have bad health and cannot help it: you cannot expect that such persons can accumulate wealth, but there are a great many in poor health who need not be so. If, then, good health is the underpinning of success and happiness in life, how important it is that we should study the laws of health, which is but another expression for the laws of nature!..."

"...The nearer we keep to the laws of nature, the nearer we are to good health, and yet how many persons there are who pay no attention to natural laws, but absolutely transgress them, even against their own natural inclination. We ought to know that the 'sin of ignorance' is never winked at in regard to the violation of nature's laws; their infraction always brings the penalty..."

"...A child may thrust its finger into the flames without knowing it will burn, and so suffers, repentance, even, will not stop the smart..."

"...Many of our ancestors knew very little about the principle of ventilation. They did not know much about oxygen, whatever other 'gin' they might have been acquainted with; and consequently they built their houses with little seven-by-nine feet bedrooms, and these good old pious Puritans would lock themselves up in one of these cells, say their prayers and go to bed..."

"...In the morning they would devoutly return thanks for the 'preservation of their lives,' during the night, and nobody had better reason to be thankful. Probably some big crack in the window, or in the door, let in a little fresh air, and thus saved them...."

"...Many persons knowingly violate the laws of nature against their better impulses, for the sake of fashion. For instance, there is one thing that nothing living except a vile worm ever naturally loved, and that is tobacco...yet how many persons there are who deliberately train an unnatural appetite, and overcome this implanted aversion for tobacco, to such a degree that they get to love it..."